I agree with this wholeheartedly. I may not be an expert in policing, I may not be an expert in making and driving trains, but I am entrusting my safety to the people who are experts...
More importantly, you are entrusting your safety to people who need to demonstrate to you that they are experts. As I mentioned before, American police officers are trained differently than their G8 counterparts, and for far less time. The public should have a say in what police officers are trained to do, and how that training should occur. But again, that's mostly controlled by unregulated police unions.
A justified rebuke as this was precisely what I had done.
I apologize if it sounded like a rebuke. What I mean is that people who propose regulations ought to do so from some position of knowledge. And to acquire that knowledge, it's proper to ask questions like what can be accomplished with a handgun that would be less final than killing the suspect. That's what I interpreted you to have been doing. You had a legitimate question that deserved an informed answer. When you come to find out, despite your prior reasonable assumptions, that handguns generally alternate between ineffective and lethal, you understand why some other countries' police forces use them only as a last resort. You're having exactly the kind of conversation that intelligent, well-meaning people need to have before they make decisions about public policy.
Can a handgun apply stopping force surgically? No, not in the tactical situations we mean. Can people be trained to act calmly in stressful situations and not be ruled by adrenaline? Yes, but American police generally are not.
However, there are elements that provoke a visceral reaction, such as being shot in the back, or being shot because there might be a weapon, or being shot in bed...
Yes. There are clear cases of police misconduct. That's why people are so angry, and why they are less pacified these days by being told it's none of their business or beyond their ken. We give police a hard job, but it's not the hard job they think it is. The job is hard because we ostensibly require them to do it within the bounds we set. These days they just don't seem to want to.
I am disturbed greatly by the constant discussions that go on here and in other places about increasing police powers in regard to crime prevention. This inevitably leads to punitive measures being taken against people who have not in fact committed any crime as yet on the basis that they might do so.
Yes, this terrifies me. As the police in America come under increasing fire (no pun intended), they have taken to "cracking down" in order to show how necessary their role is in society. It's fear mongering to justify brutality. They are thus also now in the business of generating crime that otherwise would not occur, just so that they can conspicuously fight it.
...but in a country like the US where having a gun is defeneded as a right of all law abiding citizens, does proving the person the police shot was armed justify the use of lethal force?
Contrary to popular opinion, most Americans don't wander the streets with holsters at their side. It's quite uncommon for anyone minding their business in the city to be armed. Out on a ranch, you'll see hunting-style rifles quite a lot, though. But the question I think you're asking is whether discovering
post facto merely that a person was armed should not justify using lethal force. If the police break into my house to execute a no-knock warrant, shoot me dead summarily, and later discover a handgun in my desk drawer, that's not going to fly as justified use of force.
What does one do in the case that the police stop a driver and ask for their licence, and the licence is in the glove compartment or in a pocket of their coat and there happens to be a gun nearby?
I'm glad you asked. Weapons carried in public generally must be in full view. It's unlawful in all but six states in the U.S. to carry a concealed firearm without an additional permit. Among the remaining 44, laws differ on your duty to inform a police officer who stops you whether you are armed. My state imposes no duty. Other states require you to inform an officer at the outset of the encounter if you are armed. Still more states don't require you to affirmatively state this, but you are obliged to respond honestly if asked.
Here's what my State advises.
https://bci.utah.gov/concealed-firearm/general-information/concealed-firearm-permit-frequently-asked-questions/If you open your glove compartment to fetch your license and a handgun falls out, you will have broken no law (in Utah). But you will have failed common sense. Even though no state law requires it, it's highly advisable to inform the officer that you are armed, that you have a proper permit, where the firearm is, and whether it's loaded.
That said, do criminals obtain these permits and follow the laws? Obviously not. And a violation of that is simply one more charge added to their list. Not much consolation after shots have already been exchanged, I know. But it should be mentioned that laws restricting the ownership and possession of firearms in America -- such as they are -- are generally vigorously enforced.